So far, I've been self-taught in photography, illustration and typography. I like people and shadows, both of these makes anything feel more alive to me. Without anything alive, I just can't care as much as I should. To me, there's something melancholic in most of the photos I've taken. It's not something I strive for, it's just there like some sort of fingerprint I leave behind. In many cases it's not even the important emotion I try to convey, it's more a foundation, a something that binds everything together. Like string cheese.

The drawings tend to be more diverse, I've used a wacom pen since forever now, going from UltraPad II to Intuos 4 to Cintiq 13HD. Programwise I've been all over, photoshop to painter and then back. The last few years though it's been Clip Studio Paint. It got great brushes and — most importantly — allows me to draw on huge "canvases" without turning the computer into an Unbunny song (You know, "Glacier".)

I could use fancy words that mean nothing but what I do comes from three things:

I want to be happy.

I want to be liked

I don't want to be a failure.

Having said that, don't expect me to go out of my way and do shit just to satisfy the second bullet.

As Jordan Cronenweth said: "It's not what you light, it's what you don't light that separates you from everyone else." This is true in both photography and drawing.